The result is the XE6 supercomputer, which Cray
officials said can scale to more than 1 million cores and can expand
the reach of petascale computing to a wider range of HPC
(high-performance computing) applications.

The new supercomputer will start shipping early in
the third quarter, but already Cray has more than $200 million in
contracts for the system from such facilities as the Korea
Meteorological Administration and the U.S. Department of Energy's
National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center.

Cray also will provide three XE6 systems to the U.S.
Air Force Research Laboratory, the Arctic Region Supercomputing Center
and the U.S Army Engineer Research and Development Center as part of
the Department of Defense's HPC modernization program. Other customers
include the National Nuclear Security Administration, the Engineering
and Physical Sciences Research Council and NOAA (National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration) through a partnership with the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory.

The system is powered by AMD's Opteron 6100 chips, which offer from eight to 12 cores each. AMD released the chip family-formerly named "Magny-Cours"-in March. Cray's current XT6 supercomputer also runs on the Opteron 6100 processors.

According to Barry Bolding, Cray's vice president of
scalable systems, the combination of the AMD chips with the new Gemini
interconnect technology bring vast improvements to the XE6 over
previous models.

The Gemini interconnect-which replaces the current
SeaStar technology-offers greater performance in multicore
environments, including a 100-fold improvement in messaging rates and a
three-fold reduction in latency over current systems. It also offers
hardware support for a global user address space.

"With the new Gemini interconnect, we are putting the
final piece of the puzzle in place," Bolding said in a statement. "With
the Gemini interconnect we will provide the scalable network to meet
the demands of a petascale environment. The Cray XE6 system is the
production supercomputer designed for the multicore era."

Also included in the XE6 is the third generation of the Cray Linux Environment operating system, which was announced in April.

Cray showed off the XE6 a week before the 2010 International Supercomputing show in Hamburg, Germany.